PDF Copies Of:
Our rules and our costs are immutable at all times. That means we do not have any salesmen or membership consultants. Prospective Association hunters need not waste time with crafty negotiation techniques. Have a good read of our rules (PDF document) and while a bit long, drawn out and a boring read they will provide the relationship between the hunter and the Association.
The next document that should be considered a "must read" is the membership Agreement. A shorter two page read that has three points we would like all to take away. The first is pay to hunt. Second, is all who hunt with this Association agree to follow its rules. Third, is the release of liability agreement. this is where all who hunt agree if they hurt themselves or anyone else they are solely responsible for their actions and any effect resulting from their presence on the land.
Association Hunter Feedback
"....i have yet to get one of the big ones on camera...from what i see they move differently than the smaller ones...still have not narrowed down which stand to hunt on any day..."

A nice Mallard picture from one of our Missouri wetlands following levee repair and flooding. This picture was from late summer before duck season.

We have been in business for a long time, since 1965. We are likely to be around until Jon Nee and John Wenzel reach 65 years old in the year 2024. After that the Association will be left to Jon Jr.
Waterfowl Over One Of Our Wetlands

Jon Jr., the future owner of Mid-America Hunting Association, is required to take one useable live picture for every bird harvested.
This was from a morning goose hunt where he took the risk and waited until after his hunt to take the pictures using the rationale he had to wait for better light.
He has become confident in his youth and is still in the bird in the bag count stage of hunter development. As a developing waterfowl hunter who does get limits before mid morning. That is limits on ducks and geese, but not every time out. He has found pheasant and quail limits far more challenging and while having several respectable bucks has yet to harvest that true trophy whitetail. His success is highest in the calling and decoying disciplines of waterfowl and spring turkey season.
The value Jon Jr. brings to MAHA and to the do it yourself hunter is that he is learning first hand at a young age the difficulty of self guided hunts and the value good habitat lease land brings to the hunter. Probably no other better training for the future owner and operator of MAHA.
Association Hunter Contributions
No better testimony of the good working relationship that exists between the Association staff and the hunter is illustrated than by the wealth of pictures members voluntarily send in to contribute towards everyone's success. The stronger the Association between management and member the more stable, the better the land and all is continued well into the future.
A good example of quail habitat well demonstrated by dogs on point. A bird dog never lies. If he is on point there is a bird in there. In this case the dog on point is a well aged senior hunter with the typically low tail of an older dog. Even with her advanced age she beat the younger setter with the fine tail on back to this bird.
A member that saw one of our diver duck articles and wanted to send in a photo from an early December hunt that he called in a drake Canvasback into his goose spread and he's getting it mounted.
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| Mid-America Hunting Association, Since 1965 Email, day/evening 913 773 8110 |
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